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Bloating

Your pants fit fine in the morning but feel impossibly tight by evening. Your abdomen swells after meals, sometimes looking months pregnant. You feel uncomfortable, full, and distended — and it’s affecting your quality of life. When bloating becomes a constant companion rather than an occasional nuisance, an underlying condition may be responsible.

Bloating is one of the most common digestive complaints, reported by 10-30% of adults. While occasional bloating after a large meal or certain foods is normal, chronic or severe bloating that doesn’t respond to dietary changes often signals something more than just “eating too much” or “gas.”

The digestive system is influenced by hormones, immune function, the gut microbiome, and overall metabolic health. Conditions like celiac disease, thyroid dysfunction, ovarian problems, and small intestinal bacterial overgrowth can cause persistent bloating. Blood tests can help identify many of these underlying causes, pointing the way toward effective treatment rather than endless dietary restriction.

This article explores what’s actually happening when you feel bloated and what blood tests can reveal about chronic abdominal distension.

Understanding Bloating

Bloating refers to the subjective sensation of abdominal fullness, pressure, or tightness — a feeling that your belly is swollen or “too full.” It’s one of the most common digestive complaints, reported by 15-30% of the general population and up to 90% of people with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).

Bloating is often — but not always — accompanied by visible abdominal distension (the belly actually getting larger and measurably increasing in girth). These two symptoms can occur together or independently, and distinguishing between them helps guide diagnosis and treatment.

Bloating versus distension:

Bloating is the feeling — the subjective sensation of being too full, swollen, pressurized, or tight in the abdomen. It’s what you experience and report. Bloating can be present even without any measurable changes in abdominal size.

Distension is the physical finding — an actual, objective increase in abdominal girth that can be measured with a tape measure. The abdomen visibly protrudes more than usual. Studies using abdominal imaging have confirmed that some people have significant distension (several centimeters of expansion) by evening compared to morning.

Many people experience both — they feel bloated and their abdomen measurably expands (often worse in the evening than morning). But the patterns can differ:

What causes the sensation of bloating:

Multiple mechanisms contribute to bloating, often in combination:

Patterns that suggest different causes:

Bloating that worsens throughout the day — minimal in the morning, progressively worse as the day goes on, and improving overnight — is very common. This pattern often relates to eating patterns (cumulative effect of meals), gas accumulation, posture (upright during the day allows gravity effects), and normal circadian variation in gut function. May be functional (IBS) or related to slow transit, food intolerances, or SIBO.

Bloating after specific foods — predictably worsening after consuming certain foods — suggests food intolerance (lactose, fructose, FODMAPs, gluten) or conditions like celiac disease. Keeping a food and symptom diary can help identify patterns.

Bloating with diarrhea — loose, frequent stools along with bloating — may indicate celiac disease, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), infection, or SIBO. The combination suggests malabsorption or inflammation.

Bloating with constipation — infrequent or difficult bowel movements along with bloating — often indicates slow transit, inadequate fiber and fluid, hypothyroidism, medication effects, or IBS-C (constipation-predominant IBS). Stool backing up in the colon causes distension.

Bloating that’s relatively constant — doesn’t fluctuate much with meals, time of day, or bowel movements — is more concerning and may indicate ascites (fluid accumulation), a mass, ovarian pathology, or other structural problem. This pattern warrants prompt evaluation.

Bloating with weight loss is an alarm symptom that requires prompt evaluation. The combination may indicate malignancy, malabsorption (celiac disease, pancreatic insufficiency), or inflammatory conditions.

Bloating with early satiety — feeling full very quickly after starting to eat — suggests gastroparesis (delayed stomach emptying), a gastric outlet obstruction, or an upper abdominal mass.

When bloating suggests an internal cause:

Occasional bloating after eating too much, consuming gas-producing foods (beans, cruciferous vegetables, onions), drinking carbonated beverages, or around menstruation is completely normal and doesn’t require investigation. Bloating suggesting an underlying condition:

Warning signs requiring prompt evaluation:

These “red flag” symptoms warrant prompt medical evaluation:

Celiac Disease: The Hidden Cause

Celiac disease is an autoimmune condition triggered by gluten (a protein found in wheat, barley, and rye) that damages the small intestinal lining. It affects approximately 1% of the population worldwide — roughly 1 in 100 people — but the majority of cases remain undiagnosed. Many people with celiac disease don’t know they have it, and bloating is one of its most common presenting symptoms.

Celiac disease is dramatically underdiagnosed because its symptoms are often attributed to other conditions (particularly IBS), because it can present subtly or atypically, and because many healthcare providers don’t think to test for it. Studies suggest that for every person diagnosed with celiac disease, there are 5-10 people who have it but don’t know it.

How celiac disease causes bloating:

Characteristics of celiac-related bloating:

Other celiac symptoms:

Celiac disease is a systemic condition that can affect virtually any organ system, not just the gut. Look for:

Many people with celiac disease have been diagnosed with IBS for years before the correct diagnosis is made. Studies show an average delay of 6-10 years from symptom onset to celiac diagnosis. If you have chronic bloating, especially with any of the other suggestive symptoms listed above, celiac testing is essential — it’s a simple blood test that can be life-changing if positive.

Who should be tested for celiac disease:

What to test:

tTG-IgA (Tissue Transglutaminase IgA) is the primary screening test for celiac disease, with sensitivity and specificity above 95% in most studies. Elevated levels strongly suggest celiac disease and should lead to small intestinal biopsy for confirmation.

Total IgA should be checked simultaneously because approximately 2-3% of people with celiac disease have selective IgA deficiency. In IgA deficiency, the tTG-IgA will be falsely negative because the person can’t make IgA antibodies. If total IgA is low, IgG-based tests must be used instead.

If IgA is deficient, tTG-IgG and DGP-IgG (Deamidated Gliadin Peptide IgG) are alternative tests.

Critically important: You must be eating gluten regularly (at least a few servings daily for several weeks) for celiac blood tests to be accurate. If you’ve already gone gluten-free — as many people with GI symptoms try — the antibody levels will drop and the test will be falsely negative. If you’ve already eliminated gluten, discuss with your healthcare provider about a “gluten challenge” (reintroducing gluten before testing) or genetic testing as an alternative approach.

Thyroid Dysfunction

Both hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism can cause bloating, though through different mechanisms. Thyroid disorders are common and often underdiagnosed, making thyroid testing worthwhile in anyone with persistent GI symptoms.

Hypothyroidism and bloating:

Hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid) slows metabolism throughout the body, including the digestive system:

Characteristics of hypothyroid-related bloating:

Other hypothyroidism symptoms:

Hyperthyroidism and GI symptoms:

Hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid) speeds up metabolism and gut motility, more commonly causing diarrhea than bloating. However, some people experience bloating along with frequent bowel movements.

What to test:

TSH is the primary screening test for thyroid dysfunction.

Free T4 and Free T3 measure thyroid hormone levels.

TPO antibodies identify autoimmune thyroid disease (Hashimoto’s thyroiditis).

Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO)

SIBO occurs when excessive bacteria colonize the small intestine, where bacterial populations should normally be relatively low (unlike the colon, which is teeming with bacteria). When bacteria are present in abnormal numbers in the small intestine, they ferment carbohydrates that would normally be absorbed higher in the gut, producing hydrogen, methane, and other gases that cause significant bloating.

SIBO is increasingly recognized as a common cause of chronic bloating and other IBS-like symptoms. Some studies suggest that a significant proportion of people diagnosed with IBS may actually have SIBO as the underlying cause.

How SIBO causes bloating:

Risk factors for SIBO:

SIBO doesn’t usually occur in healthy guts — certain conditions predispose to bacterial overgrowth:

Characteristics of SIBO-related bloating:

Testing for SIBO:

SIBO is typically diagnosed with breath testing rather than blood tests. After ingesting a test sugar (glucose or lactulose), you breathe into collection tubes at timed intervals. If bacteria are present in the small intestine, they ferment the sugar and produce hydrogen and/or methane, which is absorbed into the blood and exhaled in the breath.

However, blood tests have important roles in SIBO evaluation:

Vitamin B12 — bacteria consume B12, and deficiency is common in SIBO. Low B12 in someone with bloating and risk factors for SIBO supports the diagnosis.

Ferritin and iron — iron deficiency can occur from malabsorption or bacterial competition.

Vitamin D — fat-soluble vitamin deficiency may occur due to impaired fat absorption.

Folate — interestingly, folate may be normal or even elevated in SIBO because bacteria can produce folate.

Albumin and total protein — may be low if protein malabsorption is significant.

Food Intolerances

Food intolerances — different from food allergies — are a major cause of bloating. They occur when the body has difficulty digesting certain components of food, leading to fermentation and gas production.

Lactose intolerance:

Lactose intolerance is the inability to digest lactose, the sugar in milk and dairy products. It affects about 65-70% of the world’s adult population (though prevalence varies greatly by ethnicity).

Fructose malabsorption:

Some people have limited ability to absorb fructose (fruit sugar), especially when consumed in excess of glucose.

FODMAPs:

FODMAPs (Fermentable Oligosaccharides, Disaccharides, Monosaccharides, and Polyols) are a group of short-chain carbohydrates that are poorly absorbed and rapidly fermented by gut bacteria.

Blood tests don’t directly diagnose food intolerances (breath tests and elimination diets are used), but they can rule out conditions that cause similar symptoms.

Ovarian Conditions

In women, persistent bloating that doesn’t respond to dietary changes should prompt consideration of ovarian pathology. The ovaries are located in the pelvis, and ovarian masses or conditions can cause abdominal distension and a sensation of bloating.

Ovarian cancer:

Ovarian cancer is often called the “silent killer” because early symptoms are vague and easily attributed to other causes. Persistent bloating is actually one of the most common early symptoms.

Warning signs that should prompt evaluation:

These symptoms, especially when new and persistent, warrant evaluation with pelvic examination and imaging.

Ovarian cysts:

Ovarian cysts are fluid-filled sacs that are common and usually benign. Large cysts can cause bloating, pelvic pressure, and discomfort.

What to test:

CA-125 is a tumor marker that can be elevated in ovarian cancer. However, it’s not a good screening test because it can be elevated in many benign conditions and normal in early ovarian cancer. It’s most useful in conjunction with imaging and clinical evaluation.

If ovarian pathology is suspected, imaging (transvaginal ultrasound) is more informative than blood tests alone.

Liver Disease

The liver plays crucial roles in digestion and metabolism. Liver disease can cause bloating through several mechanisms, most notably the development of ascites (fluid accumulation in the abdomen).

How liver disease causes bloating:

Signs of liver-related bloating:

What to test:

ALT and AST — liver enzymes indicating liver cell damage.

Albumin — low albumin indicates reduced liver synthetic function and contributes to ascites.

Bilirubin — elevated in liver disease, causing jaundice.

GGT and ALP — elevated in cholestatic liver disease.

PT/INR — prolonged clotting time indicates impaired liver function.

Heart Failure

Heart failure can cause abdominal bloating through fluid retention. When the heart can’t pump efficiently, fluid backs up in the venous system, leading to swelling in the legs and sometimes ascites.

Characteristics:

What to test:

BNP or NT-proBNP — elevated in heart failure.

Diabetes

Diabetes can cause bloating through its effects on gut motility. Diabetic autonomic neuropathy — nerve damage affecting the digestive system — slows gastric emptying (gastroparesis) and intestinal transit.

How diabetes causes bloating:

What to test:

Fasting glucose and HbA1c

Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) — Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis — causes inflammation in the digestive tract that can lead to bloating along with other symptoms.

Characteristics:

What to test:

CRP (C-Reactive Protein) and ESR — markers of inflammation.

CBC — may show anemia, elevated white blood cells, or elevated platelets.

Albumin — may be low in active disease.

Stool tests (fecal calprotectin) and endoscopy are needed for definitive diagnosis.

The Testing Strategy for Bloating

When bloating is chronic, severe, or accompanied by other symptoms, blood tests can help identify underlying causes.

Core tests for unexplained bloating:

Celiac screening:

Thyroid function:

Inflammatory markers:

Liver function:

Metabolic:

Additional tests based on clinical picture:

What to Do With the Results

If celiac disease is found:

A strict gluten-free diet is the treatment. Bloating typically improves significantly within weeks to months of eliminating gluten. The intestinal lining heals, absorption normalizes, and symptoms resolve. Working with a dietitian experienced in celiac disease helps ensure complete gluten elimination.

If hypothyroidism is found:

Thyroid hormone replacement typically improves GI symptoms including bloating as metabolism normalizes and gut motility increases. Constipation often improves first, with bloating following.

If liver disease is found:

Management depends on the cause and severity. Ascites from cirrhosis requires sodium restriction, diuretics, and treatment of the underlying liver disease. In severe cases, procedures to remove fluid (paracentesis) may be needed.

If inflammatory markers are elevated:

Further evaluation for inflammatory conditions (IBD, infections, autoimmune conditions) is warranted, typically including imaging and possibly endoscopy.

When Tests Are Normal

Normal blood tests rule out many serious causes but don’t mean nothing is wrong. Consider:

Lifestyle Approaches

While investigating underlying causes, these evidence-based strategies can help manage bloating:

Eating habits:

Dietary modifications:

Physical activity and posture:

Mind-body approaches:

Other approaches:

The Bottom Line

Chronic bloating is more than just a nuisance — it affects quality of life, can limit what you’re willing to eat and wear, and may signal an underlying condition that deserves attention. While occasional bloating after large meals or certain foods is completely normal, persistent bloating that doesn’t respond to reasonable dietary changes warrants investigation.

Celiac disease is a particularly important cause of bloating to identify because it’s common (affecting 1% of the population), dramatically underdiagnosed (most people with celiac don’t know they have it), and treatment with a gluten-free diet is highly effective. Anyone with chronic bloating — especially with diarrhea, fatigue, anemia, or other suggestive symptoms — should have celiac testing. A simple blood test could be life-changing.

Thyroid dysfunction, particularly hypothyroidism, is another common and easily treated cause of bloating. Hypothyroidism slows everything, including gut motility, leading to bloating and constipation. A TSH test can identify this.

Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO) is increasingly recognized as a cause of chronic bloating, especially in people with risk factors like low stomach acid, slow gut motility, or previous GI surgery. While breath testing is needed for definitive diagnosis, blood tests can identify predisposing conditions and nutritional consequences.

In women, persistent bloating that doesn’t fluctuate with meals or dietary changes should prompt consideration of ovarian pathology. Ovarian cancer often presents with vague symptoms including bloating — it’s important not to dismiss these symptoms.

Food intolerances — lactose, fructose, and other FODMAPs — are common causes of bloating that can be identified through elimination diets and managed with dietary modification. Many people find significant relief with a low-FODMAP diet.

Blood tests can help in multiple ways:

If blood tests are normal, functional conditions like IBS and food intolerances become more likely. These are real conditions that cause real symptoms — they’re just not detected by blood tests. Management focuses on dietary modification (low-FODMAP diet, avoiding triggers), stress reduction, gut-directed therapies, and sometimes medications.

Don’t accept chronic bloating as “just how your body is” or something you have to live with. With proper evaluation, many causes of bloating are identifiable and treatable. Finding the underlying cause — rather than just avoiding more and more foods — can resolve symptoms that dietary restriction alone couldn’t address.


Key Takeaways

Frequently Asked Questions
When should I see a doctor about bloating?

See a doctor if bloating persists for more than 2-3 weeks despite dietary changes, if it’s severe enough to affect daily activities or what you’re willing to eat, if it’s accompanied by other symptoms like weight loss, blood in stool, or persistent diarrhea, if you notice progressive abdominal distension that doesn’t fluctuate with meals, or if you have pelvic pain or changes in urination. Women with persistent bloating that doesn’t fit typical digestive patterns should be evaluated for ovarian conditions.

What blood tests help diagnose the cause of bloating?

Key tests include celiac screening (tTG-IgA with total IgA) since celiac disease is a common and underdiagnosed cause. A thyroid panel (TSH, Free T4) identifies hypothyroidism, which slows gut motility. Inflammatory markers (CRP, CBC) help detect inflammatory bowel disease. Liver enzymes and albumin assess liver function. For women over 40 with persistent symptoms, CA-125 may be considered alongside imaging. Blood sugar testing can identify diabetes, which affects gut function.

Can celiac disease cause bloating?

Yes, bloating is one of the most common symptoms of celiac disease. When people with celiac eat gluten, their immune system attacks the small intestinal lining, impairing nutrient absorption. Unabsorbed carbohydrates reach the colon where bacteria ferment them, producing gas and causing bloating. Many people with celiac have been told they have IBS for years before the correct diagnosis. Testing with tTG-IgA is simple — just make sure you’re still eating gluten when tested, as going gluten-free beforehand can cause false negative results.

Can thyroid problems cause bloating?

Yes, hypothyroidism commonly causes bloating along with constipation. Thyroid hormones regulate metabolism throughout the body, including gut motility. When thyroid function is low, the intestines move contents more slowly, allowing more time for bacterial fermentation and gas production. Food sits longer in the digestive tract, causing fullness and distension. Bloating from hypothyroidism typically develops gradually and is accompanied by other symptoms like fatigue, weight gain, and cold intolerance. Thyroid treatment usually improves digestive symptoms.

What is SIBO and can it cause bloating?

SIBO (small intestinal bacterial overgrowth) is a condition where excessive bacteria colonize the small intestine, where they don’t normally belong. These bacteria ferment carbohydrates before they can be absorbed, producing hydrogen and methane gas that causes significant bloating, often starting within 30-90 minutes after eating. SIBO is diagnosed with breath testing, not blood tests. However, blood tests can identify predisposing conditions (diabetes, hypothyroidism) and nutritional consequences (B12 deficiency from bacterial consumption).

Can bloating be a sign of ovarian cancer?

Persistent bloating that doesn’t fluctuate with meals or dietary changes can be a symptom of ovarian cancer, which often presents with vague symptoms. Other warning signs include pelvic or abdominal pain, feeling full quickly when eating, and urinary symptoms. These symptoms together, especially when new and persistent (present most days for 2-3 weeks), warrant evaluation with pelvic examination and imaging. Most bloating is caused by digestive issues, but women should not dismiss persistent unexplained bloating.

What foods commonly cause bloating?

Common bloating triggers include beans and lentils, cruciferous vegetables (broccoli, cabbage, Brussels sprouts), onions and garlic, dairy products (if lactose intolerant), wheat and gluten-containing foods, artificial sweeteners (sorbitol, mannitol, xylitol), high-fructose foods (apples, pears, honey), and carbonated beverages. These are often high in FODMAPs — fermentable carbohydrates that gut bacteria convert to gas. A low-FODMAP diet, done properly with dietitian guidance, can help identify specific triggers.

How quickly will bloating improve with treatment?

This depends on the cause. With celiac disease, bloating often improves within days to weeks of starting a strict gluten-free diet. Thyroid treatment typically improves digestive symptoms within 2-4 weeks as hormone levels normalize. Eliminating a food intolerance shows improvement within days. SIBO treatment with antibiotics often helps within 1-2 weeks. IBS management with a low-FODMAP diet usually shows results within 2-4 weeks. Identifying the correct cause is key to effective treatment.

Can stress cause bloating?

Yes, stress significantly affects gut function through the gut-brain axis. Stress alters gut motility, increases visceral sensitivity (making you more aware of normal gas), can change gut bacteria, and affects intestinal permeability. People under chronic stress often experience more bloating, and IBS symptoms commonly worsen with stress. Addressing stress through relaxation techniques, adequate sleep, exercise, and sometimes therapy can improve bloating even when no structural cause is found.

What if blood tests are normal but I still have bloating?

Normal blood tests rule out celiac disease, thyroid dysfunction, inflammatory conditions, and liver disease. If results are normal, consider IBS (diagnosed clinically when other causes are excluded), food intolerances (identified through elimination diet or breath testing, not blood tests), SIBO (requires breath test), eating habits (eating too fast, swallowing air, carbonated beverages), or the gut-brain connection (stress, anxiety). A low-FODMAP diet trial under dietitian guidance often helps even without a specific diagnosis.

References

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